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Dr. Gutberlet
07-05-2007, 03:47 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070705/hl_nm/racial_discrimination_dc


Racial discrimination tied to breast cancer risk


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Black women who feel they've been victims of racial discrimination are more likely than their peers to develop breast cancer, a large study suggests.




The study, which followed 59,000 African-American women for six years, found that those who reported more incidents of racial discrimination had a higher risk of breast cancer.

The relationship was stronger among women younger than 50, researchers found. This finding is particularly interesting, they note, in light of the fact that, unlike the case with older women, breast cancer is more common among young black women than young white women.

It's possible that racial discrimination plays some role, according to the researchers, led by Dr. Teletia R. Taylor of Howard University in Washington, D.C.

They report their findings in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

Past studies have suggested that over time, perceived racial discrimination can take a toll on a person's health. A possible explanation is that unjust treatment serves as a source of chronic stress, which itself has been linked to poorer physical health.

In the current study, women were asked how often they faced "everyday" discrimination, like receiving poorer service than other people at stores, or feeling that people are "afraid" of them or act superior to them.

They were also asked whether they'd ever been treated unjustly on the job, in trying to get housing, or by the police -- all considered examples of "major" discrimination.

Overall, Taylor's team found, women who said they frequently ran up against everyday types of discrimination had a higher risk of developing breast cancer. The same pattern was seen with major discrimination; women who reported on-the-job discrimination, for example, had a 32 percent higher risk of breast cancer than women who reported no such prejudice.

Women who said they'd faced discrimination on the job, in housing and from the police were 48 percent more likely to develop the disease than those who reported no incidents of major discrimination.

More studies, according to Taylor's team, are needed to confirm these findings, and to uncover the reasons for the connection between racism and breast cancer.

SOURCE: American Journal of Epidemiology, July 1, 2007.

Starr
07-05-2007, 04:44 PM
I have noticed a few of these kinds of studies and articles on this theme lately. So not only is poverty, low test scores and their rate of imprisonment caused by racism, but now also their health problems. I guess people need to keep grasping at straws in order to explain away the thought that there could, in fact by innate racial differences.

I do agree that stress does most likely take a negative toll on one's health, but I would also guess that conditions of their own making in the "black community" are a tad more stressful then whitey's discrimination. Negroes are also more likely to be overweight on average and to live an unhealthy lifestyle. Some of which I am assuming relates to their lesser ability to delay gratification.

Sandee
07-05-2007, 06:06 PM
Interesting study. Breasts, in my view, represent nurturing and motherhood. So, I associate cancer in those areas with an inability to nurture or a fear of loss of intimacy, security and protection (embodied by the mother-child connection).

Emotions and stress can really affect physical health but that is something a person should learn to cope with. People face discrimination at work. Fat people are discriminated against. Short people are discriminated against too. 'Ugly' people are discriminated against. Race might be a factor but unless the person develops a coping mechanism, eliminating racial prejudice, won't necessarily result in less breast cancers. They'll just shift the blame or worry over some other factor such as money, kids' welfare, etc.

Food too plays a big role but those who live off cheap foods tend to be prone to more health complications as they're not able to afford better foods. I know there still are cheaper, healthier alternatives out there so those can be just excuses unless they didn't know better. Foods can have a deep impact on how you feel too. I know my allergies made me depressed because I'd get sick and then stress. It'll be interesting if the study also took note of the social classes of those black women.

Winston
07-05-2007, 06:57 PM
The real tie is more likely between what sort of black suffers discrimination, real or imagined, and their lifestyle. An unemployable ghetto baboon, who puts his or her woes down to white racism, might be more likely to lead an unhealthy lifestyle.

cyborg
07-05-2007, 07:08 PM
The news article is false. Social stressors affect the immune system and increase the risk of developing cancer. Multiculturalism increases social stressors. Spin dismissed. :)

Sandee
07-05-2007, 07:19 PM
The news article is false. Social stressors affect the immune system and increase the risk of developing cancer.

You worded it much better than I did. I was thinking in terms of protection (The body self-defense not functioning properly.). I believe that emotional distress does affect but there are other factors to consider as well like the person's lifestyle. There's Eustress (positive) and Distress (negative). So, not all stresses are bad. Societal pressures can be both.

cyborg
07-05-2007, 07:50 PM
In this case we have negative stressors at work. It is very interesting that the anti-health, pro-liberalism, "medical" (social) study did not bother to include breast cancer with whites exposed to multiculturalism in its "research" (construct).